Villa Ivlilla's Toga Page is
featured as part of KiddoNet's
Detective Mystery game on ancient Rome. Multas gratias, KiddoNet!

When any illustrious member dies, the family takes the
images to the funeral, puting them on...actors [who] puton a
purple-bordered toga if their character was a consul or praetor, an
entirely purple toga of he was a censor, and a gold-embroidered toga
if he had celebrated a triumph.

Much as Roman
clothing can be said to resemble that of the Greeks, the toga
is distinctive to Romans. The toga is descended from the
Etruscan tebenna, and in the early
days of Rome was probably woven of coarse, undyed wool. Later
though the toga was woven from, soft wools, linens - even silk
- during the late Roman empire.

The toga was never worn by itself, unlike its cousin, the
Greek himation. It was
worn always over a tunica,
which in the republic and early empire, bore clavi -
broad vertical stripes - borrowed from the Etruscans.

Begun as a strictly utilitarian garment, the toga evolved
into a ceremonial robe the carried such overtones of the Roman
qualities of dignitas
and gravitas
that in later times it was seldom worn except on state
occasions. Only citizens with voting rights could wear it, and
colour and decoration was strictly regulated according to
status.

Wearing the Toga

Drape
the left- hand end over the left
shoulder

Fold
the right hand end over in the middle, gather it
into a roll and throw it over the left
shoulder.

The
rest of the right- hand piece is folded and thrown
over the left shoulder.

Candidates for public office wrapped themselves in the
toga candida,
bleached to a dazzling white at the fullers, to signify the
purity of their intentions.

Augurs and certain priests wore the toga
trabea, decorated with a scarlet stripe and purple
hem. Victorious generals (and later emperors and consuls) were
awarded the purple toga
picta, embroidered with palm leaves. Mourners wrapped
their grief in an inky toga
pulla.

Fate of the Toga

As the Republic ballooned into an empire, so expanded the
toga, until it measured XX feet in length, and VII - X feet in
width; no doubt causing Tertullian to complain, "This is no
garment but a burden."

Officials continued to wear the toga until the fifth
century, but after the fall of the Empire, it had shrunk to a
mere VI feet in length, and the average Roman citizen had
given up on the toga altogether, bringing it out only for
festivities and funerals.